Save Your Home Workshop

May 16, 2010  |  Community events, REO, Short Sales  | 

Wow! Yesterday was nothing short of beyond being informative! I was supposed to Flip Video this event that tooks us months to put together and I was so “in” to what the speakers were saying that I totally forgot. Jees! I must remember to designate that job to someone else next time!

Gerald Wolff, the bankruptcy attorney, was beyond amazing! This is one attorney that honestly KNOWS what he is talking about. He understands it, and he will not just take any client. That is a sign of true professionalism. Meaning, if it isn’t right for the client, then no deal. Move on. Gerald was a wealth of knowledge, and I feel so lucky my agents utilize him for their clients. It gives me peace of mind that we are truly doing the right thing, and actually getting the right information to our community. There are so many government programs and issues with the banks that simply do NOT work. It is not to the benefit of the homeowner.

Times have changed. I am an airforce brat, and my dad is a product of the Great Depression. I have been raised you can’t afford it with cash, then you don’t buy it. By no means, do you ever walk away from a debt, and God forbid ever losing your home. Well, guess what, stated income had not been introduced and fraudulant loans being brokered off. Bottom line is it is no longer a moral issue, but rather a business decision. Because of that this is why homeowners MUST know their rights and what they should do today. Look at how many people are going through divorces, robbing Peter to pay Paul, and dying under their mortgage which is hundreds of thousands of dollars they will never recoup. Dare we even say anything about retirement? Big businesses and developers have no emotion when they walk away from a business deal that has no ROI. Look at the developer in New York that just walked away from the $5.4 BILLION dollar housing deal.

The point of yesterday was eye opening to hear the RIGHT information, and put it into perspective that everyone is, or knows someone that is, going through debt. People feel lost, or worse, they are just completely unaware of all of their legal rights or best financial advise that they could take advantage of. Having Stella from Consumer Credit Counseling Service of Orange County was critical in this educational process! There are HUD services that can go through your paperwork and speak to your bank to see if they will release the deficiency judgement or are you so buried you have no choice but to just walk away. Can you take advantage of makinghomeaffordable.gov programs? So many questions and programs that need to be addressed when trying to make th best business decision they possibly can.

My best friend in Texas is a single mom with 2 beautiful children, and she has had her house on the market for 2 years! The agents in Texas no nothing like we do on short sales. I can’t even believe how many homeowners across the country are in the same horrific position NOT knowing their rights and what they can actually do to save their credit and get out of the strangeling financial burdens they are carrying. Come on, how great of a mom/dad/spouse can one possibly be when you go to bed ever night dying under a financial throat hold? Thinking there is no end to a place you don’t want to be! Very sad and is happening every day. My brother went through the same thing in Florida. When I speak to agents and homeowners nationwide they just don’t even know or are aware of all of their options they can take advantage of. I know www.nw.org is out there, too, but there just aren’t enough of these governement entities offered with consulting and free classes like we have here in Orange County.

I am just so glad here in Orange County we have aligned ourselves with the best professionals and HUD services one could ever even hope to have so that we, as professionals, are equipped to truly get out there and help homeowners or even first time homebuyers. Financial education and awareness is everything right now. Peace of mind to getting your money into motion and feeling reassured we are doing the right thing for our particular circumstance is just vital to all of us.

I honestly thank our caring & loving real estate agents at First Team Anaheim Hills for always wanting to know more, better themselves so they can better their clients and staying 110% focused on what matters right now in this ever shifting market: Jackie May, Paul Armas, Kathy Leimkhler, Joyce Nethery, Ken Singh, Art & Jean Navarro, Sonia Tulsiani, Sally Parikh, Mike & Kathey Busse, Oscar Jimenez, Jay Cook, Emily Juarez, Corrine Porter, Larry & Helen Sangorgio, Jerry Addison, Rama Sharma, Ernie Espinosa and Nina Emelianoff. You guys are a true inspiration, and I know I can go to bed at night knowing we are doing our part to help our community. I can’t wait to start doing this every quarter as we have planned. Our next workshop will be even more exciting I just know it!

Thanks again, and I am lucky to know Gerald, Stella, Heather and Amelia Castro from Wachovia and Laura Cowie from our Hallmark Escrow. You guys all rock and thanks for sharing yesterday!

Anaheim Hills Community event – Save your home workshop

May 14, 2010  |  News and Events, REO, Short Sales  | 

May 15th from 10am until Noon at the Anaheim Hills Community Center

Tomorrow is the big day! I can’t believe how awesome Jackie May, Nina Emelianoff, and Paul Armas have all been in getting this event ready. Laura Cowie, our Hallmark Gold Coast Escrow contact has been incredible! We have quite the lineup scheduled for our community tomorrow. Attending is:

Gerald Wolfe, ESQ. Law Office of Gerald Wolfe 949-257-0961

Heather Johnson and Stella Matadama of Consumer Credit Counseling Services 714-547-2227

Wachovia Bank with their short sale asset manager, Amelia Castro

Hallmark Escrow – Laura Cowie and Sandra Khorram 714-378-9000

This will be an information filled event for anyone curious on new laws or how they can save their home. This is such a timely and needed event for our community when people are trying to get answers from banks on what their options are. I hope anyone and everyone turns out to this as we all probably know someone in our lives who may need to Save Their Home! At First Team Anaheim Hills office, we are trying to promote and educate our local community.

Short Sales & REO Info by Jacob Swodeck

January 20, 2010  |  REO, Short Sales  | 

Yesterday I had Jacob Swodeck hold an event for me in my region on a 5 year outlook on short sales, reos and the real estate market in general. Jacob is one of the top short sales experts in the country and always comes with a tremendous amount of value in fueling us with knowledge on what we are facing in distressed housing situations. Good news is the banks are really trying to get it together in the approval process. The forefront of these banks is clearly Wachovia. Count your blessings if you have a Wachovia loan or a World Savings Portfolio as Wachovia is by far ahead of the game! Wells Fargo is on their way, also. We look forward to seeing Bank of America improve their process this year.

It was interesting to hear from a top real estate forecaster, Terry Duke. We learned a leading factor to CA bankrupt state. Made sense. Banks will probably still hold on to REO’s due to this fact. We are in the second wave and probably one more to go. Consistent information all around. Bottom line is the stimulus package and the change of Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae will be the cause of more short sale situations to come.

We look forward to the amazing panel line up on February 25th in Ontario:
www.shortsaleevents.com CODE: SSSOntario
It will be great to hear from Mel Aclaro who wrote the SOCIAL MEDIA REPORT for 2010 and my buddy Loren Nason Top Technology Coach who lives out here in Anaheim Hills with me. Great panel and great information to come!

As anyone who knows me knows, I teach Social Media Networking to anyone who want to come every Thursday at 1pm in my office. I will hold another event with Jacob on February 17th at 10:30am again at the Anaheim Hills Community Center to discuss how to use Social Media Networking as a Real Estate agent to increase your productivity. This will be a great event to go to for free to hear about the 25th event in Ontario.

Walk Away from your Mortgage! – NY Times article OUCH!

January 14, 2010  |  Articles, REO, Short Sales  | 

By ROGER LOWENSTEIN
Published: January 7, 2010
John Courson, president and C.E.O. of the Mortgage Bankers Association, recently told The Wall Street Journal that homeowners who default on their mortgages should think about the “message” they will send to “their family and their kids and their friends.” Courson was implying that homeowners — record numbers of whom continue to default — have a responsibility to make good. He wasn’t referring to the people who have no choice, who can’t afford their payments. He was speaking about the rising number of folks who are voluntarily choosing not to pay.
Source: First American CoreLogic, November 2009
Human Empire Such voluntary defaults are a new phenomenon. Time was, Americans would do anything to pay their mortgage — forgo a new car or a vacation, even put a younger family member to work. But the housing collapse left 10.7 million families owing more than their homes are worth. So some of them are making a calculated decision to hang onto their money and let their homes go. Is this irresponsible?

Businesses — in particular Wall Street banks — make such calculations routinely. Morgan Stanley recently decided to stop making payments on five San Francisco office buildings. A Morgan Stanley fund purchased the buildings at the height of the boom, and their value has plunged. Nobody has said Morgan Stanley is immoral — perhaps because no one assumed it was moral to begin with. But the average American, as if sprung from some Franklinesque mythology, is supposed to honor his debts, or so says the mortgage industry as well as government officials. Former Treasury Secretary Henry M. Paulson Jr. declared that “any homeowner who can afford his mortgage payment but chooses to walk away from an underwater property is simply a speculator — and one who is not honoring his obligation.” (Paulson presumably was not so censorious of speculation during his 32-year career at Goldman Sachs.)

The moral suasion has continued under President Obama, who has urged that homeowners follow the “responsible” course. Indeed, HUD-approved housing counselors are supposed to counsel people against foreclosure. In many cases, this means counseling people to throw away money. Brent White, a University of Arizona law professor, notes that a family who bought a three-bedroom home in Salinas, Calif., at the market top in 2006, with no down payment (then a common-enough occurrence), could theoretically have to wait 60 years to recover their equity. On the other hand, if they walked, they could rent a similar house for a pittance of their monthly mortgage.

There are two reasons why so-called strategic defaults have been considered antisocial and perhaps amoral. One is that foreclosures depress the neighborhood and drive down prices. But in a market society, since when are people responsible for the economic effects of their actions? Every oil speculator helps to drive up gasoline prices. Every hedge fund that speculated against a bank by purchasing credit-default swaps on its bonds signaled skepticism about the bank’s creditworthiness and helped to make it more costly for the bank to borrow, and thus to issue loans. We are all economic pinballs, insensibly colliding for better or worse.

The other reason is that default (supposedly) debases the character of the borrower. Once, perhaps, when bankers held onto mortgages for 30 years, they occupied a moral high ground. These days, lenders typically unload mortgages within days (or minutes). And not just in mortgage finance, but in virtually every realm of our transaction-obsessed society, the message is that enduring relationships count for less than the value put on assets for sale.

Think of private-equity firms that close a factory — essentially deciding that the company is worth more dead than alive. Or the New York Yankees and their World Series M.V.P. Hideki Matsui, who parted company as soon as the cheering stopped. Or money-losing hedge-fund managers: rather than try to earn back their investors’ lost capital, they start new funds so they can rake in fresh incentives. Sam Zell, a billionaire, let the Tribune Company, which he had previously acquired, file for bankruptcy. Indeed, the owners of any company that defaults on bonds and chooses to let the company fail rather than invest more capital in it are practicing “strategic default.” Banks signal their complicity with this ethos when they send new credit cards to people who failed to stay current on old ones.

Mortgage holders do sign a promissory note, which is a promise to pay. But the contract explicitly details the penalty for nonpayment — surrender of the property. The borrower isn’t escaping the consequences; he is suffering them.

In some states, lenders also have recourse to the borrowers’ unmortgaged assets, like their car and savings accounts. A study by the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond found that defaults are lower in such states, apparently because lenders threaten the borrowers with judgments against their assets. But actual lawsuits are rare.

And given that nearly a quarter of mortgages are underwater, and that 10 percent of mortgages are delinquent, White, of the University of Arizona, is surprised that more people haven’t walked. He thinks the desire to avoid shame is a factor, as are overblown fears of harm to credit ratings. Probably, homeowners also labor under a delusion that their homes will quickly return to value. White has argued that the government should stop perpetuating default “scare stories” and, indeed, should encourage borrowers to default when it’s in their economic interest. This would correct a prevailing imbalance: homeowners operate under a “powerful moral constraint” while lenders are busily trying to maximize profits. More important, it might get the system unstuck. If lenders feared an avalanche of strategic defaults, they would have an incentive to renegotiate loan terms. In theory, this could produce a wave of loan modifications — the very goal the Treasury has been pursuing to end the crisis.

No one says defaulting on a contract is pretty or that, in a perfectly functioning society, defaults would be the rule. But to put the onus for restraint on ordinary homeowners seems rather strange. If the Mortgage Bankers Association is against defaults, its members, presumably the experts in such matters, might take better care not to lend people more than their homes are worth.

Roger Lowenstein, an outside director of the Sequoia Fund, is a contributing writer for the magazine. His book “The End of Wall Street” is coming out in April.

Huge News from Capitol Hill on Short Sales (Simplified)

December 8, 2009  |  News and Events, Short Sales  | 

NEW YORK, Nov 30 (Reuters) – The U.S. Treasury on Monday set long-awaited guidance on a plan for mortgage companies to speed “short sales” of homes and other loan modification alternatives to stem a rising tide of foreclosures.

The Home Affordable Foreclosure Alternatives Program provides financial incentives and simplifies the procedures for completing short sales, a growing practice in which a lender agrees to accept the sale price of a home to pay off a mortgage even if the price falls short of the amount owed, according to an announcement on the Treasury’s website.

Guidelines address barriers that have often sidelined short sales by setting limits on the time it takes a bank to approve an offer, freeing borrowers from debt and capping claims of subordinate lenders.

The incentives, first announced in May, expand on the government’s Home Affordable Modification Program, known as HAMP, that has seen limited success in lowering payments for distressed homeowners. The Treasury earlier on Monday stepped up pressure on mortgage companies to make permanent the 650,000 modifications offered under trial conditions.

“While HAMP program guidelines are intended to reach a broad range of at-risk borrowers, it is expected that servicers will encounter situations where they are unable to approve” a modification, the Treasury said in its announcement.

Short sales have been frustrating for borrowers and real estate agents, often hung up by negotiations with multiple lien holders and mortgage insurance companies. Real estate agents have complained that sales fall through as lenders bicker over the sales price, what they should receive from the proceeds, and whether the borrower will be held accountable for the debt in the future.

In one of the most contentious issues for real estate agents, the guidance caps the aggregate proceeds to subordinate lien holders at $3,000.

The Treasury’s guidance would require that the borrower be fully released from future liabilities.

It also prohibits mortgage servicing companies from reducing real estate commissions on the sale, a practice that has dissuaded many agents from taking short sale listings. (Editing by Leslie Adler) SOURCE: Reuters

ORIGINAL LINK: http://www.reuters.com/article/bondsNews/idUSN3046464720091130

By Al Yoon